2) Could you tell us a little about where you grew up and about your family? My little brother and I lived with my maternal Grandmother in Madison until the summer between my 5th and 6th grades. My paternal grandparents lived about a block away. My mom died when I was very young, and my dad was overseas (He was a Federal law enforcement agent--- he was doing waste, fraud and abuse of foreign aid by the various despots in this world). I sort of ran things in that household, so one day my aunt (who lived in Monona) called my dad (who was in Karachi, Pakistan) and told him to get his ass home, as, David is running things , and I dont think she meant it in a positive light. In order to comply with this desire, my dad transferred to Washington, D.C., so thats where I spent the rest of my childhood, more specifically, Alexandria, Va. (They have human no fishing signs, there.)

3) Did you play in any sports or where you involved with any High School clubs and such? I played all the usual sports, but my primary passion was football. I hold a dubious distinction, in that I was the QB for one of the opponents of T.C. Williams high school, of Remember the Titans movie-fame, in that exact time-frame and with the white-flight issues that it entailed. . I spent four years on my back, as we had linemen no bigger than some of our opponents DBs and such. It was ugly.

4) What is your fondest memory of your teenage years? So many. Helene V. Cindy C. Diane B. Vickywell, you get the point. Salt and Pepper basketball. Skinny-dipping in the various swimming pools. Older kids going to The Nam, A friend driving a fork-lift off the top of a high-rise under construction (what a boom when it hit the ground), shooting bottle rockets into a cop-car from a storm drain when they were looking for usmany, many good memories.

5) What was your first job? I worked for a crazy SOB that owned the highest-volume gas station in Va. During the first gas-crisis. It was all full service, we wore white uniforms, checked everybodys hood, washed everybodys windshield and rear window, and customers were strongly discouraged from getting out of their car. The boss (retired AirForce) would coming running out and wipe the top of the gas island if a customer got out of their car and stepped on it. (They were painted white). He had a camera in his office and his home (He lived in a high-rise behind the gas station) If an employee ever stepped on an island, he was terminated on-the spot. I loved him. He paid us $1.75 an hour, when the minimum wage was $1.60 , PLUS he paid a commission on all the various fluids sold to customers.

6) What lead to your dedicated following of the Packers? I grew up in Wisconsin when Vince Lombardi was our coach. That is self-explanatory.

7) Could you tell us one of your favorite memories of the Packers? The Reggie White signing. The sense that Green Bay would no longer be perceived as a purgatory for mis-behaving NFL players.

8 ) How did you find the PackersHome and what keeps you active on the site? I found this site by talking smack over at PurplePride. They perceived me as a typical dumb-ass Packer fan, and I responded in-kind. I very much enjoy(ed) the back and forth over there, and one day Pack93z very kindly invited me to this forum. I WAS a very active member of PackerChatters, but the tone there is a tad bit anal and cliquish. This site is right-sized and much more personable and friendly. I think Kevin has struck an excellent balance here.

9) What other sports teams do you follow? I lean more towards hatred than fandom when it comes to other teams. I used to be an Orioles fan, back when they had Earl Weaver, Two-pack stanhouse, Bumbry, Cal, and a hell of a lot of fun and character as a baseball team. The strikes cured me of that. I also loved ACC basketball, along with the rivalry between the ACC and Big East, when all those greats played at the same time. Jordon, Worthy, Thompsons team at Georgetown, Virginia with all their great players, etc. Nowadays my number one sports following is Tiger Woods. I love to watch that man play golf, and did not watch any while he was gone. It just isnt the same without him. I even like the advertisements that have been running on the Golf channel announcing his return. They make me laughHe is the MAN. I think you need to play the game to truly appreciate how good he is.

10) When youre not on PackersHome what could you likely be found doing with your spare time? I play a lot of pool. I will be going back to golfing after a 11/2 year sabbatical, due to my combo Rottie/Bassett Hound getting reactionary when I touched his foodhe bit my right hand middle finger almost off. It is to the point that I will be able to play again.

11) If you could have one moment being part of the Packer organization, what would it be? Well, naturally, since I already think Im qualified, I would like to be GM on draft day. You think Teds arrogant? Youd be screaming for his return.

12) How many trips have you made to Lambeau? Ive been there around 20 times, but the last one was several years ago. It was by far my most memorable. I have a very good friend from D.C. He always takes me to the Redskin games (this gets into my preference to hate as contrasted to rooting for other teams/sports). I took him to Lambeau, my Uncle owns my Grandfathers tickets now9 rows back behind the Packer bench. I go to the shop and buy a Brett Jersey, my D.C. buddy is talking to Ahman Green and some of the life-long season ticket holders, (when I get back to the seat) one thing leads to another, Ahman asks me what I bought, I show him, he calls Brett over, and Brett signs it. This all before the game, which the Pack won, with boy-wonder no longer strutting on the field. Even my buddy thinks that Lambeau is the most magical place in sports, to the point that he didnt care that we beat the foreskins.

13) What is your worst fear? Anything happening to one of my kids.

14) What type of hobbies do you enjoy? The pool I mentioned, Bsing with friends in my local watering hole, farting around with automobiles, rehabbing apartments buildings (little ones- one at a time, solo, mostly)

15) Whats your favorite food? Korean food. Almost all of it. I think Ive had just about every ethnic food there is, and the Koreans have stolen the cuisine of everyone that matters. If you havent had Korean food, get to a restaurant that doesnt have any engrish on the menu. Get the $50. for two, dont ask what it is, just have them bring it to you. You will thank me for that advice.

16) Where are some of the places youve been, and where are some of your favorites. I am a Marine. We are like cockroaches, we are everywhere. Favorites? I have so many, at different times I like home, wherever that is.

17) What is one thing you've always wanted to do, but haven't done yet in your lifetime? I want some payback in Iran and Lebanon, and I will leave it at that. Were this wish realized, they wouldn't like it so much.

18) If you could live anywhere where would it be? In the continental United States, it would be San Diego. I like the proximity to Baja/Tijuana, etc. but wouldnt want to live in Mexico. 93z, I lived in Hawaii, wonderful place, but I would need a really good jet, helicopter and boat to want to live there permanently, and would choose Molokai over Maui if my preconditions were met.

19) Name your favorite 5 Packers all time and explain the reason for one of them. Bart Starr. Intelligence, class, demeanor. Every one the 60s Packers, especially the offensive linemen that got in the habit of telling their opponents what play they were going to run next (Green Bay Sweep) and daring them to stop it. Leroy Butler. He defined Packer people. Sterling Sharpe. He gave us hope and thrills. Majik man, same reason. Lynn Dickey, because I won a hundred bucks in 1983, off my aforementioned Redskin buddy, got thrown out of his abode, and upon being summarily thrown out, heard my buddy utter, Lynn dick-meI think STILL the highest scoring MNF game. Brett. Reggie taking over the Superbowl, because thats what needed to be done, in his (and my) opinion.

20) Up to this date, what is you favorite PackersHome feature or memory? Its the folks here. You remind me of home.

21) PM and post the next person to be interviewed. I want to hear from my very favorite gnome.

Some insight into the perverse combination of a jarhead/cheesehead.That is an amalgamation of the most nefarious kind! ::wink:

Seriously Dave, you have led an interesting life and one that you can be very proud of.Thirty years in the Corps.....extremely impressive. I doubt that I could made such a commitment, and dedicated life choice.I salute you Sir! :salute:

I must add that I would definitely consider it an honor to meet you someday.

You are a worthy adversary, and truly a good man!

Sidenote: I am limited to "kind" words for cheeseheads to once year. :icon_smile:

That 48-47 win was the best game EVER. No game was that good. I keep hearing people say this game or that game and I shush them before they can finish their sentence. There's no subjectivity. It is a fact. And it's final. Best game EVER.

Lynn Dickey is one of those "could have been" QBs. Had he not had the worst OL in the game, things would be completely different. Brett Favre would be chasing Lynn Dickey's records. Dickey had the best long ball I've ever seen.

Good stories, especially the gas, how you entertained yourselves as kids, and the Ahman Green one.

When I lived in SoCal, there was a little Korean Bar-Be-Que place in Oxnard. Wow was it good. I'll look for a Korean place this weekend.

It stands to reason that your interview would be one of the longest, you old salt. Fascinating read -- I had a lot of fun. I'm a little puzzled, though. Didn't I nominate you to be the next interviewee several months ago?

Awesome that you like Korean food. Have you been to Korea? I took my family there last august. The food there was amazing... NOTHING in the US tasted anything like it. I got completely spoiled there by their food.

I don't enjoy the eating out here as much anymore... Could have been the ingredients...

Awesome that you like Korean food. Have you been to Korea? I took my family there last august. The food there was amazing... NOTHING in the US tasted anything like it. I got completely spoiled there by their food.

I don't enjoy the eating out here as much anymore... Could have been the ingredients...

Little River turnpike corridor in Annandale, Va. Korean restaurants up the ying-yang. Never ate in a bad one.

Lee Highway corridor in Falls Church, Va. Korean Supermarkets - and not little ones- as full sized as regular supermarkets.

(D.C. suburbs)

Wife number two was Korean. Fortunately she dumped me, or I'd probably weigh a quarter-ton by now. In addition to knowing all the restaurants and markets, she could really cook that stuff.

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